Corn export sales hit marketing year high worldwide

Published 2021년 11월 26일

Tridge summary

The USDA has reported a significant increase in corn export sales to 1.4 million tons, with Mexico and Canada being the main buyers, along with China. There has also been an improvement in soybean and wheat sales, while sorghum, cotton, and rice exports have declined. Beef and pork exports have also seen a decrease in the week ending November 18th. The next set of supply and demand estimates from the USDA will be released on December 9th.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

The USDA says corn export sales hit a marketing year high during the week ending November 18th. Corn sales topped 1.4 million tons, with Mexico and Canada accounting for most of the total, and included a purchase by China, which has largely been relying on Ukraine for corn over the past few months. Soybean and wheat sales also posted week to week improvements, while soybean product, sorghum, cotton, and rice all declined. Beef and pork export sales were also down on the week. The USDA’s next set of supply and demand estimates is out December 9th.Physical shipments of sorghum and soybeans were above what’s needed to meet USDA projections for the current marketing year. The 2021/22 marketing year started June 1st for wheat, August 1st for cotton and rice, September 1st for beans, corn, and sorghum, and October 1st for soybean products. The marketing year for beef and pork is the calendar year.Wheat came out at 567,500 tons (20.9 million bushels), up 42% from the week ending November ...

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